Abstract
The present report identifies indole-3-ethyl isothiocyanate NB7M as a potent cytotoxic agent with selective activity against cell lines derived from various tumour types. Ovarian cancer cell lines showed sensitivity to NB7M (60–70% cytotoxicity at 2.5 μ M), in contrast to control cells (TCL-1 and HTR-8; IC50 ∼15 μ M). In a screen performed by the National Cancer Institute (NCI) (NCI60 cancer cell-line assay) NB7M (NSC746077) reduced growth up to 100% with an IC50 between 0.1 and 10 μ M depending on the cell line studied. Using SKOV-3 ovarian cancer cells as a model, mechanisms of cytotoxicity were analysed. NB7M caused hallmarks of apoptosis such as PARP-1 deactivation, chromatin condensation, DNA nicks, activation of caspases-9, -8, -3, loss of mitochondrial transmembrane depolarisation potential and upregulation of pro-apoptotic mitogen activated protein kinases (p38, SAP/JNK). NB7M downregulated phosphorylation of prosurvival kinases (PI-3K, AKT, IKKα), transcription factor NF-κB, and expression of DNA-Pk and AXL receptor tyrosine kinase. Subcytotoxic doses of NB7M inhibited DNA synthesis, caused G1-phase cell-cycle arrest and upregulated p27 expression. The present report suggests that NB7M is a selective cytotoxic agent in vitro for cell lines derived from ovarian and certain other tumours. In addition, NB7M acts as a growth/cell-cycle-suppressing agent and may be developed as a potential therapeutic drug to treat ovarian cancer.
Similar content being viewed by others
Main
In 2007 in the United States 1 444 920 new cancer cases were diagnosed and 553 888 patients died of cancer. Ovarian cancer is the leading cause of death from gynaecological malignancies and ranks second among newly diagnosed gynaecological cancers in the United States (Heintz et al, 2003; American Cancer Society, 2007). Although most patients (70–80%) initially respond to cytoreductive surgery and adjuvant paclitaxel and platinum-based chemotherapy the majority will experience disease recurrence (McGuire et al, 1996; Piccart et al, 2000). Re-treatment with a platinum-based drug is possible for some women the response rate to current second-line or third-line (after interim non-platinum therapy) chemotherapy is below 33% due to the rise of resistance to such drugs (McGuire and Ozols, 1998; Leitao et al, 2003; Lamberth et al, 2004; Ott and Gust, 2007). Therefore, the development of novel chemotherapeutics with increased activity and alternative modes of action to treat such tumours, instead of or in addition to or after platinum therapy, is desired.
Naturally occurring isothiocyanates (ITC) such as BITC, PEITC and sulforaphane have been shown to inhibit chemically induced tumorigenesis in animal models in the lung, stomach, colon, liver, oesophagus, bladder and mammary glands (Conaway et al, 2002). Mechanisms of ITC activity in cancer cells, such as induction of G2/M cell-cycle arrest, and apoptosis (Singh et al, 2004), suppression of angiogenesis with the disruption of microtubulin polymerisation and mitotic progression of endothelial cells (Jackson et al, 2007; Xiao and Singh, 2007), release of reactive oxygen species and disruption of mitochondrial membrane depolarisation have been described (Xiao et al, 2006). Isothiocyanates were shown to be substrates for human glutathione transferases (Kolm et al, 1995). In addition to various naturally occurring ITCs, synthetic ITCs such as E-4IB have been discovered, which sensitised ovarian cancer cells to cisplatin-induced apoptosis by affecting signalling pathways (Bodo et al, 2006).
In an initial attempt to design a more potent ITC class of antitumour agents, we recently screened novel indolyl ethyl ITCs for enhanced anticancer cell activity (Singh et al, 2007). 7Me-IEITC (methyl substitution at C7 of the indole moiety) is a key representative of this new generation of ITC with increased potency as compared to various naturally occurring ITCs such as BITC (Kalkunte et al, 2006), PEITC (Satyan et al, 2006) and sulforaphane (Singh et al, 2004). The mechanisms linked to this selective cytotoxicity include induction of apoptosis, alteration of mitogen activated protein kinase (MAPK) signalling and cell-cycle inhibitory effects by 7Me-IEITC in both high-risk neuroblastoma (Singh et al, 2007) and platinum-resistant ovarian cancer cells (Singh et al, 2008).
The primary objective of this study was to further optimise the structural attributes of 7Me-IEITC (Figure 1A). The rationale of adding a tert-butyl carbamate group (converting the compound into NB7M; Figure 1A) was to protect the amino group in the hope of increasing the bioavailability as the lipophilic protection of a nitrogen atom in various anticancer drugs enhances tissue permeability (Serova et al, 2007). In a recent study, we reported an increased cytotoxicity and rapid induction of apoptosis by NB7M in nervous system cancer cells in vitro (Brard et al, 2008). In the present study, we (1) compared the cytotoxic effects of NB7M on ovarian and other tumour-derived cell lines, (2) identified the mechanisms of programmed cell death of SKOV-3 cells induced by NB7M (3) analysed the expression of key MAPKs and other prosurvival markers and (4) reported inhibitory effects of subcytotoxic doses of NB7M on cell-cycle progression of SKOV-3 cells substantiated by studies on the expression of check-point regulators of the cell cycle.
Materials and methods
Compound
Details to the synthesis and structural characterisation of NB7M and the standardised NCI60 cancer cell-line in vitro assay are described in the Supplementary Information section. The purity and stability of NB7M was determined by high performance liquid chromatography. Purity of NB7M was 98%; NB7M showed stability in solution for 72 h at RT and of more than 12 weeks (period of investigation) at −20°C.
Cell culture
Cell lines SKOV-3, OVCAR-3 (human ovarian epithelial adenocarcinoma), PC-3 (human prostate adenocarcinoma), BxPC-3 (human pancreatic adenocarcinoma) and A-431 (human epidermoid skin carcinoma) were obtained from American Type Culture Collection (Manassas, VA, USA). TCL-1 (human immortalised retroviral large T-antigen transfected trophoblasts) and HTR-8/SVneo (first-trimester cytotrophoblasts with extended lifespan) were kindly provided by Dr Surendra Sharma, Providence, RI, USA. All cells were seeded at 5 × 105 per flask and cultured to ∼80% confluency in T75 cell culture flasks (Corning, New York, NY, USA) in DMEM or RPMI (Gibco, Rockville, MD, USA) supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum (Atlanta Biologicals, Lawrenceville, GA, USA), 100 U ml−1 penicillin and 100 μg ml−1 streptomycin at 37°C, 5% CO2, in a humidified incubator.
Cell viability assay
Viability of cells was determined by the 96®Aqueous-One-Solution Assay (Promega, Madison, WI, USA) (Malich et al, 1997). For assays with inhibitors (p38/SB203580, caspase-3/Z-DEVD-FMK, Calbiochem, La Jolla, CA, USA) cells were pre-incubated with 40 μ M inhibitor for 2 h before drug addition. The assay was carried out as described previously (Lange et al, 2007); data are expressed as the mean of the triplicate determinations (X±s.d.) of a representative experiment in % of absorbance of samples with untreated cells (100%).
Mitochondrial transmembrane depolarisation potential
Cells (1 × 106) were seeded in a 100 mm2 Petri dish in DMEM complete media and incubated for 24 h. Media was removed and replenished with fresh media containing 2 μ M NB7M for 12 or 24 h. The test was carried out as described previously (Singh et al, 2008). Ten thousand cells were analysed for each sample.
Morphological studies
Cells were seeded into a Lab-Tek Chamber Slide System. (Nalge Nunc., Int., Naperville, IL, USA) at a concentration of 1 × 104 per chamber in complete medium, incubated overnight, and treated for 24 h with 2 μ M NB7M (∼IC50) at 37°C, 5% CO2. The test was carried out as described previously (Lange et al, 2008). Representative images were taken with an inverted microscope (Nikon Eclipse TE2000-E fitted with a cooled CCD camera) and × 20 objective.
Cell proliferation assay
Cell proliferation was determined by a BrdU assay (Roche Applied Science, Indianapolis, IN, USA) measuring the incorporation of the pyrimidine analogue, 5-bromo-2′-deoxyuridine (BrdU) during DNA synthesis. Briefly, cells (5 × 103) were plated into 96-well flat bottom plates (Corning Incorporated, Corning, NY, USA) and allowed to attach overnight before treatment with NB7M (results section) for 42 h in complete medium. The assay was carried out as described previously (Lange et al, 2008). Experiments were performed in triplicates; data are expressed as mean of triplicate determinations (X±s.d.) of a representative experiment in % of absorbance of samples with untreated cells (100%).
Cell-cycle analysis (by FACS)
Cell-cycle analysis and quantification of apoptosis were carried out by flow cytometry. Cells were seeded into 100 mm2 tissue culture dishes (7.5 × 105 cells per dish, Corning Incorporated), allowed to attach overnight and treated in complete medium under cell culture conditions with 2 μ M NB7M for 24 or 48 h. The test was carried out as described previously (Lange et al, 2008). Ten thousand events were analysed for each sample. Appropriate gating was used to select the single-cell population. The same gate was used on all samples, ensuring that the measurements were made on a standardised cell population.
TUNEL assay
DNA fragmentation was detected by terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP nick-end labelling (TUNEL), using the DeadEnd™ Fluorometric TUNEL System assay (Promega, Madison, WI, USA). Briefly, cells (5 × 103) were plated into 96-well flat bottom plates (Corning Incorporated) and allowed to attach overnight before treatment with 2 μ M NB7M or 25 μ M actinomycin D for 24 h in fresh complete medium. The assay was carried out as described previously (Lange et al, 2008). All experiments were performed in triplicate.
Western blot analysis
Cells were seeded in 100 mm2 tissue culture dishes (5 × 105 cells per dish) and cultured to ∼80% confluency. Cells were treated with or without 2 μ M NB7M for various lengths of time (result section). Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and immunoblotting were carried out as described previously (Lange et al, 2008). Primary antibodies (Cell Signaling Technology, Beverly, MA, USA) were diluted 1 : 1000 in PBST/5% BSA. Bands were visualised using horseradish peroxidase-conjugated secondary antibodies (Amersham-Pharmacia Biotech, Piscataway, NJ, USA), followed by enhanced chemiluminescence (Upstate, Waltham, MA, USA) and documented autoradiography (F-Bx810 Film, Phenix, Hayward, CA, USA).
Results
NB7M shows differential effects on the viability of various human cancer cell lines
In an initial approach to analyse the effects of NB7M (Figure 1A) on ovarian cancer cells, we performed a cytotoxicity assay (Figure 1B) using SKOV-3 and OVCAR-3 (human platinum-resistant ovarian epithelial adenocarcinoma) cell lines in comparison to adenocarcinoma cell lines from different tissues (e.g., BxPC-3, pancreatic; PC-3, prostate). Furthermore, we tested the effect of NB7M on A-431 cancer cells (human epidermoid) and immortalised cell lines with primary features (TCL-1, trophoblasts; HTR-8, first-trimester cytotrophoblasts).
NB7M proved to be highly and dose-dependently cytotoxic for all five cancer cell lines studied, including ovarian cancer cell lines SKOV-3 and OVCAR-3 (60–70% cytotoxicity at 2.5 μ M) (Figure 1B). In contrast, TCL-1 and HTR-8 (trophoblasts) were not affected at 5 μ M NB7M. As these control cell lines possess a similar metabolic rate as cancer cells in this screen, NB7M apparently showed selective cytotoxicity against cancer-derived cells. To further evaluate the tumour-type selectivity of NB7M, the effect of this compound at 10 μ M was screened in an NCI60 cell line growth/viability assay (http://dtp.nci.nih.gov/screening.html, Figure 2A). NB7M at 10 μ M proved to significantly reduce the viability of colon cancer cells (COLO205, HCT-116, HCT-15, KM12 and SW620), breast cancer (NCI/ADR-RES, MCF7), ovarian cancer (IGROV1, OVCAR-3, OVCAR-8), leukaemia (CCRF-CEM, HL-60, K-562, MOLT-4), renal cancer (ACHN, CAKI-1, SN12C, TK-10), melanoma (LOX IMVI, M14, MALME-3M, SK-MEL-2, SK-MEL-28), prostate (DU145) and non-small lung cancer cells (NCI-H23) cells. In contrast, several non-small lung cancer cell subtypes (EKVX, NCI-H322M and NCI-H226) and a breast cancer cell line (BT-549) were resistant to NB7M treatment (Figure 2A). In the same assay the dose-dependent effect of various concentrations of NB7M (10 nM–100 μ M) on a panel of ovarian cancer cell lines was compared (Figure 2B). The growth of IGROV1, OVCAR-3, OVCAR-5 was highly affected by 10 μ M of the drug (as shown for OVCAR-3 in the cytotoxicity assay performed in our laboratory) and OVCAR-8 and OVCAR-4 responded strongly to treatment, whereas SKOV-3 revealed less but still significant reduction in growth compared to the other five lines tested by the National Cancer Institute (NCI). Taken together, the NCI screen (http://dtp.nci.nih.gov/screening.html) and our cytotoxicity assays suggest NB7M to be highly and specifically detrimental to cell lines derived from certain tumour types, including ovarian cancer, but less effective against other tumour types and marginally cytotoxic for control cell lines (e.g., TCL-1, HTR-8; Figure 1B and MRC-5 fibroblasts, Singh et al, 2008).
NB7M affects the mitochondrial membrane potential of SKOV-3 and causes morphological hallmarks of apoptosis
To understand the mechanism involved in the cellular response to NB7M treatment, we examined the mitochondrial transmembrane depolarisation potential (ΔYm) of SKOV-3 cells by flow cytometry. NB7M at a concentration of 2 μ M caused a rapid loss of ΔYm (29% loss within 12 h; 44% within 24 h) in SKOV-3 cells (Figure 3A). NB7M showed similar reductions in the ΔYm of SMS-KCNR, a chemotherapy-resistant neuroblastoma cancer cell line (Brard et al, 2008). Loss of ΔYm due to chemical agents has been reported to be an indicator of onset of early apoptotic events (Petit et al, 1995).
In addition, treatment of SKOV-3 cells with NB7M resulted in drastic morphologic changes. Untreated cells or cells treated for 24 h with 2 μ M NB7M after fixation and chromatin staining with DAPI were analysed by light and fluorescence microscopy. The population of untreated cells showed a homogenous morphology with nuclei lightly and evenly stained by DAPI (Figure 3B, no drug). In contrast, after treatment with NB7M (2 μ M) only ∼20% of cells appeared unaffected, whereas the majority of cells (Figure 3B) showed densely stained nuclear granular bodies of highly condensed chromatin (‘apoptotic bodies’), a classic hallmark of apoptosis (Earnshaw, 1995).
Induction of apoptosis in SKOV-3 ovarian cancer cells by NB7M
We analysed the activation of cellular markers that are characteristic of apoptosis by immunoblotting. Apoptosis is executed by caspases; initiator caspases (such as caspases-2, -8, -9 and -10) once activated, cleave and activate downstream effector caspases (such as caspases-3, -6 and -7), which are responsible for the cleavage of many intracellular proteins, leading to the morphological and biochemical changes associated with apoptosis (Thornberry and Lazebnik, 1998; Salvesen and Abrams, 2004). NB7M treatment of SKOV-3 cells resulted in the activation/cleavage of initiator caspases-8 and -9 (within 1–6 h) followed by enhanced upregulation of executioner caspase-3 within 18 h (reaching maximal activation at 36 h) (Figure 3C). The activation of proteolytic caspases following drug exposure resulted in the cleavage of PARP-1 (Figure 3C). PARP, a 116 kDa nuclear poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase, is involved in DNA repair (Satoh and Lindahl, 1992), and cleavage of PARP facilitates cellular disassembly and serves as a marker of cells undergoing apoptosis (Oliver et al, 1998). The proof that reduction of SKOV-3 viability by NB7M is a direct consequence of the induction of apoptosis is shown in Figure 3D. We used caspase-3 or -9 inhibitors, which were added to the viability assay 2 h before and during the treatment with NB7M. Cytotoxicity of NB7M (at 1 μ M) was reduced by ∼60% following addition of the caspase-3 inhibitor and by ∼35% following inhibition of caspase-9.
A TUNEL assay, a common method for detecting DNA fragmentation resulting from apoptotic signalling cascades, was carried out. The assay relies on the presence of nicks in the DNA of apoptotic (and necrotic) cells, which can be identified by a terminal transferase that catalyses the addition of labelled dUTP. SKOV-3 cells were treated with either 2 μ M of NB7M or 25 μ M of actinomycin D (positive control for drug-induced DNA fragmentation) for 48 h. Nuclei were counterstained with propidium iodide. TUNEL-positive nuclei were identified by yellow spots, resulting from an overlay of the image with apoptotic staining (FL-dUTP, green) and nuclear staining (Pi, red). As shown in Figure 3E, a significant number of cells after NB7M treatment were TUNEL-positive indicating fragmented DNA.
NB7M treatment causes MAPK activation and suppression of prosurvival markers in SKOV-3 ovarian cancer cells
To define key signalling responses of SKOV-3 cells to treatment with NB7M, we analysed the expression and activation/phosphorylation of cellular markers involved in prosurvival or pro-apoptotic signalling. Immunoblotting of PAGE-separated cellular lysates revealed that NB7M (at 2 μ M) caused a rapid, strong, and sustained activation of p38 and JNK MAPK (Figure 4A). Both MAPKs are crucial factors in signalling cascades responding to inflammatory cytokines, stress, UV light, osmotic shock, cytotoxic drugs and diverse pro-apoptotic stimuli (Pearson et al, 2001). Upregulation of activated p38 and JNK MAPKs resulted in slight downregulation of the basal level of inactive JNK and p38 (Figure 4A). In addition, expression of the phosphorylated/activated form of ERK1/2 in SKOV-3 was downregulated upon NB7M treatment (2 μ M), whereas inactive ERK1/2 remained at high level in untreated or treated SKOV-3 cells. Both ERK 1 and 2 (p44 and p42 MAPKs) generally participate in a protein kinase cascade that plays a critical role in the regulation of cell growth and differentiation and can be found activated in their role as survival factors as well as in apoptotic events (Pearson et al, 2001; Ahmed-Choudhury et al, 2006).
We directly addressed the role of p38 activation in the lethal response of SKOV-3 cells to NB7M by performing the viability assay in the presence of MAPK inhibitors (p38/SB203580, p38/SB202190 and negative control, SB202474, Figure 4B). Inhibitors (40 μ M) were added to the viability assay 2 h before and during the treatment with NB7M (1.5 or 3 μ M). A significant suppression of NB7M cytotoxicity was achieved by interfering with p38 MAPK signalling (∼40 to 60% restoration of viability at 1.5 μ M NB7M depending on the inhibitor used) (Figure 4B).
In addition to the activation of pro-apoptotic kinases, NB7M excerted inhibitory effects on various prosurvival kinases. Immunoblotting experiments indicated that downregulation of DNA-Pk and Axl expression in SKOV-3 cells upon NB7M treatment occurred within 18 h of treatment (Figure 4C) and revealed a time-dependent downregulation of the activation/phosphorylation of various prosurvival proteins such as PI-3k (phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase), Akt, IKKα and transcription factor NF-κB (Figure 4D).
NB7M effect on cell proliferation and cell-cycle progression
As described in the previous sections, NB7M is a cytotoxic agent that activates apoptotic processes in SKOV-3 ovarian cancer cells. To investigate if NB7M affects the proliferation of SKOV-3 cells (particularly at drug concentrations when viability is not affected or partially reduced), we performed a BrdU incorporation assay. In this assay, BrdU incorporation into replicating DNA is detected by an antibody–peroxidase conjugate allowing a colorimetric reaction with the colour intensity directly representing cell proliferation. NB7M dose-dependently reduced SKOV-3 proliferation (Figure 5A). At a drug concentration of 1.5 μ M (for 48 h) proliferation of treated SKOV-3 was inhibited by 70% as compared to untreated cells. Even at drug concentrations in the nano-molar range BrdU incorporation into the DNA was reduced. Thus, NB7M is a potent pro-apoptotic agent as well as an antiproliferative agent.
Cell-cycle analysis of SKOV-3 cells after NB7M treatment at subcytotoxic concentrations (250 and 500 nM) revealed a significant increase in the G1-phase cell population and reduction in S-phase cells compared to untreated control, while the G2 cell population remained largely unaffected within 18–36 h of treatment (Figure 5B and C). Interestingly, 6 h of treatment temporarily led to a decrease of cells in the G1-phase and an increase in S-phase. This indicated that proliferation and S-phase progression was adversely affected within 6 h of treatment, while a block of cell-cycle progression in G1 in this non-synchronised culture unfolded within 18 h of treatment. Immunoblotting revealed that NB7M treatment of SKOV-3 affected the expression of two prominent members of the Cip/Kip family of cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) inhibitors, which are key regulators involved in cell growth in vivo, in vitro, in tumour and normal tissues (Stillman, 1996; Albrecht et al, 1998; Pines, 1999): P27 (kip1) CDK was upregulated and p21 downregulated upon NB7M treatment (Figure 5D). These preliminary observations suggest further studies on the specific antiproliferative mechanisms of NB7M in cancer cell lines (e.g., ovarian tumour).
Discussion
NB7M is a novel synthetic indole ethyl ITC designed from 7Me-IEITC, a potent cytotoxic agent in its own right (Singh et al, 2007, 2008). Unprotected indole nitrogen groups of 7Me-IEITC can potentially cause chemical degradation reactions. Accordingly, NB7M was synthesised by tBoc-protection of the indole nitrogen of 7Me-IEITC; the addition of an acid-labile protecting group (tert-butyl carbamate) on the secondary nitrogen is most likely to enhance the stability of the indole ethyl ITC. We recently reported that NB7M shows potent apoptotic and inhibitory effects on the cell cycle in nervous system cancer cell lines (Brard et al, 2008).
In this study, the cytotoxicity of NB7M in well-characterised human solid tumour cancer cell lines (ovarian, prostate, skin and pancreas) and two human control cell lines with similar growth rate (TCL-1/immortalised trophoblasts and HTR-8-SVneo/first-trimester cytotrophoblasts with extended lifespan) was defined. NB7M showed no adverse effect on TCl-1 and HTR-8 at a concentration (5 μ M) that was highly cytotoxic to the five cancer cell lines. Given the differential responses of controls versus cancer cells tested, the effect of NB7M on cell growth was screened by the NCI Developmental Therapeutics Program (DTP) against a panel of 60 cancer cell lines, which broadly represent human tumours of colon, ovarian, lung, melanoma, leukaemia, renal, prostate and central nervous system. NB7M showed potent activity against most tumour types. Notable exceptions were non-small cell lung cancer cell subtypes NCI-H322H, HOP-62, EKVX and A549. The compounds minimal activity against several non-small lung cancer cells is reminiscent of data retrieved after the treatment by naturally occurring ITCs (PEITC and BITC) causing cell death of A549 non-small lung cancer cells only at higher doses (Fang and Hwa, 2004). The cytotoxicity toward SKOV-3 ovarian cancer cells, however, is several fold higher when NB7M is used instead of BITC and PEITC (this study, Kalkunte et al, 2006; Satyan et al, 2006). The DTP at the NCI maintains a public accessible database of cytotoxic drugs; a comparison analysis (COMPARE) of known cytotoxic drugs versus NB7M indicated that NB7M is more potent than a variety of clinically relevant drugs, such as cisplatin, oxaloplatin, seliciclib, CNDAC, 5-FU and cyclophosphamide, in most of the NCI60 cell lines but is less potent than docetaxel, adriamycin and gemcitabine.
Our in vitro investigations have shown that NB7M and its synthetic parent compound 7Me-IEITC show overlapping cytotoxic effects with ovarian cancer cell lines OVCAR-3 and SKOV-3 being more sensitive to NB7M as compared to 7Me-IEITC (present manuscript; Singh et al, 2008). This also applies to several neuroblastoma cell lines, while the viability of lung fibroblasts or trophoblast cell lines by either compound is only marginally affected (Singh et al, 2007; Brard et al, 2008). These overlapping effects are not surprising because 7Me-IEITC, due to conversion by hydrolytic enzymes such as amidases, may be a metabolite of the N4-protected NB7M, similar to conversion of N4-protected sapacitabine into gemcitabine and ara-C in cancer cells (Serova et al, 2007). Nevertheless, differences in the degree of cytotoxic action by these related compounds could be explained by the unique stereo-electronic properties of NB7M due to a carbamate group not present in 7Me-IEITC, which may offer additional interactions with target proteins. In addition, the introduction of a tertiary butyl carbamoyl substituent of the indole nucleus of 7Me-IEITC most likely endowed NB7M with resistance to intramolecular or intermolecular reactions (e.g., between the indole nitrogen with the ITC group). Finally, the fact that cells may accumulate and retain a higher concentration of NB7M (because it is more lipophilic than 7Me-IEITC) might explain the differences in drug cytotoxicity.
NB7M and its precursor 7Me-IEITC showed a striking similarity in the expression and/or activation of a multitude of molecular targets, including DNA-PK, Axl, PI-3K, Akt; the MAPKs ERK1/2, p38, JNK; NF-κB and the CDK inhibitor p27 (present manuscript; Singh et al, 2007; Brard et al, 2008; Singh et al, 2008). Many types of tumours are associated with activated oncogenic kinases. These kinases play two complementary roles; they stimulate signalling pathways that enable cells to function independent of their environment and they cause tumour cells to become resistant to genotoxic therapies (Hanahan and Weinberg, 2000). For example, Axl is known to bind the vitamin K-dependent protein growth-arrest-specific gene 6 (Gas6) and to activate PI-3K and its downstream targets S6K, Akt and NF-κB (Crosier and Crosier, 1997; Demarchi et al, 2001). The serine/threonine kinase, Akt, and its family members are amplified or their activity is constitutively elevated in human carcinomas such as breast, pancreatic, ovarian, brain, prostate and gastric tumours (Nicholson and Anderson, 2002). Drugs such as NB7M that can block Akt, PI-3K, survival kinase IKKα and transcription factor NF-κB activities, which are known to contribute to tumour growth by promoting cell-cycle entry, cell proliferation, cell migration, or antiapoptotic responses, and are implicated in resistance to radio- and chemotherapy (Kip et al, 2002; Greten and Karin, 2004), are potential cancer therapeutics.
As it is a direct downstream target of PI-3K, Akt is a key oncogenic survival factor and can inactivate a broad panel of critical pro-apoptotic molecules such as p38 MAPK, Bad, caspase-9, the Forkhead transcription factor FKHRL1, GSK3-β, cell-cycle inhibitors p21 and p27, and tumour suppressors p53 and TSC2 (Zhou et al, 2001; Inoki et al, 2002; Blain and Massague, 2002; Liao and Hung, 2003). Activation of Akt has been shown to induce resistance to apoptosis induced by a number of drugs (Page et al, 2000). Activation of the PI-3K/Akt pathway has been linked to cisplatin resistance in ovarian cancer cell lines (Lee et al, 2005). Consequently, our observations that NB7M inactivates the PI-3K pathway and downstream factors IKKα and NF-κB suggests that NB7M could be used to enhance the effectiveness of chemotherapy of drug resistant tumours. Several natural compounds and synthetic drugs that are able to inhibit the IKK/NF-κB activation pathway have been shown to either prevent cancer or to inhibit cell growth in animal models (Bharti and Aggarwal, 2002), and we suggest further exploration of potential chemotherapeutic properties of NB7M in an ovarian cancer animal model.
This report also shows that NB7M, in addition to its selective cytotoxic properties, at subcytotoxic concentrations acts as a potent inhibitor of SKOV-3 ovarian cancer cell proliferation. NB7M treatment affects cell-cycle checkpoints in G1-phase, causing reduction in the progression of cells into S- and G2/M-phase. Blocking the progression of dividing cells to G2/M-phase also reduces the possibility of DNA repair and thereby leads to increased cell death, counteracting/bypassing resistance mechanisms. Similarly, another plant-derived molecule, Guggulsterone, caused cell-cycle arrest in S-phase by the suppression of cyclin D1 and cdc2 and increased CDK inhibitor p21 and p27 expression in a wide variety of human tumour cell types (Shishodia et al, 2007). Apparently, transformed cells can be more sensitive to CDK inhibition because of the fact that components of the cell-cycle machinery are frequently altered in human cancer (Hartwell and Kastan, 1994; Gladden and Diehl, 2003), and thus, can be specifically targeted. Even though not the objective of this report, future studies will examine the effects of NB7M on specific cell-cycle checkpoints in synchronised ovarian cancer cells. Targeting cell-cycle checkpoints has been suggested as an alternative approach to anticancer therapies (Shapiro and Harper, 1999; Mazumder et al, 2004), and NB7M at subcytotoxic concentrations has the potential to selectively interfere with the progression of cancer cell proliferation.
In summary, this report suggests that NB7M is a potent growth-suppressing agent to cell lines derived from ovarian cancers and a potential therapeutic drug to treat such tumours in vivo.
Change history
16 November 2011
This paper was modified 12 months after initial publication to switch to Creative Commons licence terms, as noted at publication
References
Ahmed-Choudhury J, Williams KT, Young LS, Adams DH, Afford SC (2006) SCCD40 mediated human cholangiocyte apoptosis requires JAK2 dependent activation of STAT3 in addition to activation of JNK1/2 and ERK1/2. Cell Signal 18: 456–468
Albrecht JH, Poon RYC, Ahonen CL, Rieland BM, Deng C, Crary GS (1998) Involvement of p21 and p27 in the regulation of CDK activity and cell cycle progression in the regenerating liver. Oncogene 16: 2141–2150
American Cancer Society (2007) Cancer Facts and Figures 2007, www.cancer.org
Bharti AC, Aggarwal BB (2002) Chemopreventive agents induce suppression of nuclear factor-kappaB leading to chemosensitization. Ann N Y Acad Sci 973: 392–395
Blain SW, Massague J (2002) Breast cancer banishes p27 from nucleus. Nat Med 8: 1076–1078
Bodo J, Hunakova L, Kvasnicka P, Jakubikova J, Duraj J, Kasparkova J, Sedlak J (2006) Sensitisation for cisplatin-induced apoptosis by isothiocyanate E-4IB leads to signalling pathways alterations. Br J Cancer 95: 1348–1353
Brard L, Singh RK, Kim KK, Lange TS, Sholler GLS (2008) Induction of cytotoxicity, apoptosis and cell cycle arrest by 1-t-butyl carbamoyl,7-methyl-indole-3-ethylisothiocyante (NB7M) in nervous system cancer cells. Drug Design, Development and Therapy 2: 61–69
Conaway CC, Yang Y, Lunk FC (2002) Isothiocynates as chemopreventive agents: their biological activities and metabolism in rodents and humans. Curr Drug Metabol 3: 233–255
Crosier KE, Crosier PS (1997) New insights into the control of cell growth; the role of the AxI family. Pathology 29: 131–135
Demarchi F, Verardo R, Varnum B, Brancolini C, Schneider C (2001) Gas6 anti-apoptotic signaling requires NF-kB activation. J Biol Chem 276: 31738–31744
Earnshaw WC (1995) Nuclear changes in apoptosis. Curr Opin Cell Biol 7: 337–343
Fang KY, Hwa CY (2004) Induction of apoptosis in a non-small cell human lung cancer cell line by isothiocyanates is associated with P53 and P21. Food Chem Toxicol 42: 1711–1718
Gladden AB, Diehl JA (2003) Cell-cycle progression without cyclin E/CDK2: breaking down the walls of dogma. Cancer Cell 4: 160–162
Greten FR, Karin M (2004) The IKK/NF-kB activation pathway – a target for prevention and treatment of cancer. Cancer Lett 206: 193–199
Hanahan DR, Weinberg A (2000) The hallmarks of cancer. Cell 100: 57–70
Hartwell LH, Kastan MB (1994) Cell-cycle control and cancer. Science 266: 1821–1828
Heintz APM, Odicino F, Maisonneuve P, Beller U, Benedet JL, Creasman WT, Ngan HYS, Pecorelli S (2003) International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics 25th Annual Report. Carcinoma of the Ovary. Int J Gyn 83: 135–137
Inoki K, Li Y, Zhu T, Wu J, Guan KL (2002) TSC2 is phosphorylated and inhibited by Akt and suppresses mTOR signalling. Nat Cell Biol 4: 648–657
Jackson SJ, Singletary KW, Venema RC (2007) Sulforaphane suppresses angiogenesis and disrupts endothelial mitotic progression and microtubule polymerization. Vascul Pharmacol 46: 77–84
Kalkunte S, Swamy N, Dizon DS, Brard L (2006) Benzylisothiocyanate (BITC) induces apoptosis in ovarian cancer cells in vitro. J Exp Ther Oncol 5: 287–300
Kip A, West S, Sianna C, Dennis PA (2002) Activation of the PI-3K/Akt pathway and chemotherapeutic resistance. Drug Res Updates 5: 234–248
Kolm RH, Danielson UH, Zhang Y, Talalay P, Mannervik B (1995) Isothiocyanates as substrates for human glutathione transferases: structure-activity studies. Biochem J 311: 453–459
Lange TS, Singh RK, Kim KK, Zou Y, Kalkunte SS, Sholler GS, Swamy N, Brard L (2007) Anti-proliferative and pro-apoptotic properties of 3-bromoacetoxy calcidiol (B3CD) in high-risk neuroblastoma. Chem Biol Drug Design 70: 302–310
Lange TS, Kim KK, Singh RK, Strongin RM, McCourt CK, Brard L (2008) Iron(III)-salophene: an metallo-organic compound with selective cytotoxic and anti-proliferative properties in platinum-resistant ovarian cancer cells. PLOS One 3 (5): e2303
Lamberth E, Gregory WM, Nelstrop AE, Rustin GJ (2004) Long-term survival in 463 women treated with platinum analogs for advanced epithelial carcinoma of the ovary: life expectancy compared to women of an age-matched normal population. Int J Gynecol Cancer 14: 772–778
Lee S, Choi EJ, Jin C, Kim DH (2005) Activation of PI-3K/Akt pathway by PTEN reduction and PIK3CA mRNA amplification contributes to cisplatin resistance in an ovarian cancer cell line. Gynecol Oncol 97: 26–34
Leitao Jr MM, Hummer A, Dizon DS, Aghajanian C, Hensley M, Sabbatini P, Venkatraman E, Spriggs DR (2003) Platinum retreatment of platinum-resistant ovarian cancer after nonplatinum therapy. Gynecol Oncol 91: 123–129
Liao Y, Hung MC (2003) Regulation of the activity of p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase by Akt in cancer and adenoviral protein E1A-mediated sensitization to apoptosis. Mol Cell Biol 23: 6836–6848
Malich G, Markovic B, Winder C (1997) The sensitivity and specificity of the MTS tetrazolium assay for detecting the in vitro cytotoxicity of 20 chemicals using human cell lines. Toxicology 124: 179–192
Mazumder S, DuPree EL, Almasan A (2004) A dual role of cyclin E in cell proliferation and apoptosis may provide a target for cancer therapy. Curr Cancer Drug Targets 4: 65–75
McGuire WP, Hoskins WJ, Brady MF, Kucera PR, Partridge EE, Look KY, Clarke-Pearson DL, Davidson M (1996) Cyclophosphamide and cisplatin compared with paclitaxel and cisplatin in patients with stage III and stage IV ovarian cancer. N Engl J Med 334: 1–6
McGuire WP, Ozols RF (1998) Chemotherapy of advanced ovarian cancer. Semin Oncol 25: 340–348
Nicholson KM, Anderson NG (2002) The protein kinase B/Akt signaling pathway in human malignancy. Cell Signal 14: 381–395
Oliver FJ, de la Rubia G, Rolli V, Ruiz-Ruiz MC, de Murcia G, Murcia JM (1998) Importance of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase and its cleavage in apoptosis. Lesson from an uncleavable mutant. J Biol Chem 273: 33533–33539
Ott I, Gust R (2007) Non platinum metal complexes as anti-cancer drugs. Arch Pharm 340: 117–126
Page CH, Lin J, Jin Y, Castle VP, Nunez G, Huang M, Lin J (2000) Overexpression of Akt/AKT can modulate chemotherapy-induced apoptosis. Anticancer Res 20: 407–416
Pearson G, Robinson F, Beers GT, Xu BE, Karandikar M, Berman K, Cobb MH (2001) Mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase pathways: regulation and physiological functions. Endocr Rev 22: 153–183
Petit PX, Lecoeur H, Zorn E, Dauguet C, Mignotte B, Gougeon M (1995) Alterations in mitochondrial structure and function are early events of dexamethasone-induced thymocyte apoptosis. J Cell Biol 130: 157–167
Piccart MJ, Bertelsen K, James K, Cassidy J, Mangioni C, Simonsen E, Stuart G, Kaye S, Vergote I, Blom R, Grimshaw R, Atkinson RJ, Swenerton KD, Trope C, Nardi M, Kaern J, Tumolo S, Timmers P, Roy JA, Lhoas F, Lindvall B, Bacon M, Birt A, Andersen JE, Zee B, Paul J, Baron B, Pecorelli S (2000) Randomized intergroup trial of cisplatin-paclitaxel versus cisplatin-cyclophosphamide in women with advanced epithelial ovarian cancer: three-year results. J Natl Cancer Inst 92: 699–708
Pines J (1999) Four-dimensional control of the cell cycle. Nat Cell Biol 1: 73–79
Satoh MS, Lindahl T (1992) Role of poly(ADP-ribose) formation in DNA repair. Nature 356: 356–358
Satyan KS, Swamy N, Dizon DS, Singh R, Granai CO, Brard L (2006) Phenethyl isothiocyanate (PEITC) inhibits growth of ovarian cancer cells by inducing apoptosis: Role of caspase and MAPK activation. Gynecol Oncol 103: 261–270
Salvesen GS, Abrams JM (2004) Caspase activation-stepping on the gas or releasing the brakes? Lessons from humans and flies. Oncogene 23: 2774–2784
Serova M, Galmarini CM, Ghoul A, Benhadji K, Green SR, Chiao J, Faivre S, Cvitkovic E, Tourneau CLe, Calvo F, Raymond E (2007) Antiproliferative effects of sapacitabine (CYC682), a novel 2′-deoxycytidine-derivative, in human cancer cells. Br J Cancer 97: 628–636
Shapiro GI, Harper JW (1999) Anticancer drug targets: cell-cycle and checkpoint control. J Clin Invest 104: 1645–1653
Shishodia S, Sethi G, Ahn KS, Aggarwal BB (2007) Guggulsterone inhibits tumor cell proliferation, induces S-phase arrest, and promotes apoptosis through activation of c-Jun N-terminal kinase, suppression of Akt pathway, and downregulation of antiapoptotic gene products. Biochem Pharm 74: 118–130
Singh RK, Lange TS, Kim KK, Zou Y, Lieb C, Sholler GL, Brard L (2007) Effect of indole ethyl isothiocyanates on proliferation, apoptosis, and MAPK signaling in neuroblastoma cell lines. Bioorg Med Chem Lett 17: 5846–5852
Singh RK, Lange TS, Kim K, Shaw S, Brard L (2008) A Novel Indole Ethyl Isothiocyanate (7Me-IEITC) with Anti-proliferative and Pro-apoptotic Effects on Platinum-resistant Human Ovarian Cancer Cells. Gynecol Oncol 109: 240–249
Singh SV, Herman AA, Singh AV, Lew KL, Srivastava SK, Kamath R, Brown KD, Zhang L, Baskaran R (2004) Sulforaphane-induced G2/M phase cell cycle arrest involves checkpoint kinase 2-mediated phosphorylation of cell division cycle. J Biol Chem 279: 25813–251322
Stillman B (1996) Cell cycle control of DNA replication. Science 274: 1659–1664
Thornberry NA, Lazebnik Y (1998) Caspases: enemies within. Science 281: 1312–1316
Xiao D, Singh SV (2007) Phenethyl isothiocyanate inhibits angiogenesis in vitro and ex vivo. Cancer Res 67: 2239–2246
Xiao D, Lew KL, Zeng Y, Xiao H, Marynowski SW, Dhir R, Singh SV (2006) Phenethyl isothiocyanate induced apoptosis in PC-3 human prostate cancer cells is mediated by reactive oxygen species-dependent disruption of the mitochondrial membrane potential. Carcinogenesis 27: 2223–2234
Zhou BP, Liao Y, Xia W, Zou Y, Spohn B, Hung MC (2001) HER-2/neu induces p53 ubiquitination via Akt-mediated MDM2 phosphorylation. Nat Cell Biol 3: 973–982
Acknowledgements
This study was supported by a NICHD K12 HD043447 BIRCWH Scholar Grant to Dr Brard. We thank NIH COBRE Grant 1-P20RR018728 for providing instrumentation.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Additional information
Supplementary Information accompanies the paper on British Journal of Cancer website (http://www.nature.com/bjc)
Supplementary information
Rights and permissions
From twelve months after its original publication, this work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/
About this article
Cite this article
Singh, R., Lange, T., Kim, K. et al. Isothiocyanate NB7M causes selective cytotoxicity, pro-apoptotic signalling and cell-cycle regression in ovarian cancer cells. Br J Cancer 99, 1823–1831 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.bjc.6604778
Revised:
Accepted:
Published:
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.bjc.6604778
Keywords
This article is cited by
-
Description of the cytotoxic effect of a novel drug Abietyl-Isothiocyanate on endometrial cancer cell lines
Investigational New Drugs (2012)
-
A coumarin derivative (RKS262) inhibits cell-cycle progression, causes pro-apoptotic signaling and cytotoxicity in ovarian cancer cells
Investigational New Drugs (2011)
-
Sulforaphane induces cell cycle arrest by protecting RB-E2F-1 complex in epithelial ovarian cancer cells
Molecular Cancer (2010)